5.2 KiB
Add a custom linkifier
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Linkifiers make it easy to refer to issues or tickets in third
party issue trackers, like GitHub, Salesforce, Zendesk, and others.
For instance, you can add a linkifier that automatically turns #2468
into a link to https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/2468
.
If the pattern appears in a topic, Zulip adds an Open () button to the right of the topic in the message recipient bar that links to the appropriate URL.
If you have any trouble creating the linkifiers you want, please contact Zulip support with details on what you're trying to do.
Add a custom linkifier
{start_tabs}
{settings_tab|linkifier-settings}
-
Under Add a new linkifier, enter a Pattern and URL template.
-
Click Add linkifier.
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Common linkifier patterns
The following examples cover the most common types of linkifiers, with a focus on linkifiers for issues or tickets.
Link to an issue or ticket
This is a pattern that turns a #
followed by a number into a link. It is often
used to link to issues or tickets in third party issue trackers, like GitHub,
Salesforce, Zendesk, and others.
{start_tabs}
- Pattern:
#(?P<id>[0-9]+)
- URL template:
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/{id}
- Original text:
#2468
- Automatically links to:
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/2468
{end_tabs}
Link to issues or tickets in multiple projects or apps
To set up linkifiers for issues or tickets in multiple projects,
consider extending the #2468
format with project-specific
variants. For example, the Zulip development community
uses
#M2468
for an issue in the repository for the Zulip mobile app,
#D2468
and issue in the desktop app repository, etc.
{start_tabs}
- Pattern:
#M(?P<id>[0-9]+)
- URL template:
https://github.com/zulip/zulip-mobile/issues/{id}
- Original text:
#M2468
- Automatically links to:
https://github.com/zulip/zulip-mobile/issues/2468
{end_tabs}
Link to issues or tickets in multiple repositories
For organizations that commonly link to multiple GitHub repositories, this
linkfier pattern turns org/repo#ID
into an issue or pull request link.
{start_tabs}
- Pattern:
(?P<org>[a-zA-Z0-9_-]+)/(?P<repo>[a-zA-Z0-9_-]+)#(?P<id>[0-9]+)
- URL template:
https://github.com/{org}/{repo}/issues/{id}
- Original text:
zulip/zulip#2468
- Automatically links to:
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/2468
{end_tabs}
Link to a hexadecimal issue or ticket number
The following pattern linkfies a string of hexadecimal digits between 7 and 40 characters long, such as a Git commit ID.
{start_tabs}
- Pattern:
(?P<id>[0-9a-f]{7,40})
- URL template:
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/commit/{id}
- Original text:
abdc123
- Automatically links to:
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/commit/abcd123
{end_tabs}
Advanced linkifier patterns
Linkifiers are a flexible system that can be used to construct rules for a wide variety of situations. Linkifier patterns are regular expressions, using the re2 regular expression engine.
Linkifiers use RFC 6570 compliant
URL templates to describe how links should be generated. These templates support
several expression types. The default expression type ({var}
) will URL-encode
special characters like /
and &
; this behavior is desired for the vast
majority of linkifiers. Fancier URL template expression types can allow you to
get the exact behavior you want in corner cases like optional URL query
parameters. For example:
- Use
{+var}
when you want URL delimiter characters to not be URL-encoded. - Use
{?var}
and{&var}
for variables in URL query parameters. - Use
{#var}
when generating#
fragments in URLs.
The URL template specification has brief examples and detailed examples explaining the precise behavior of URL templates.
Linking to documentation pages
This example pattern is a shorthand for linking to pages on Zulip's ReadTheDocs site.
{start_tabs}
- Pattern:
RTD/(?P<article>[a-zA-Z0-9_/.#-]+)
- URL template:
https://zulip.readthedocs.io/en/latest/{+article}
- Original text:
RTD/overview/changelog.html
- Automatically links to:
https://zulip.readthedocs.io/en/latest/overview/changelog.html
{end_tabs}
!!! tip ""
This pattern uses the `{+var}` expression type. With the
default expression type (`{article}`), the `/` between `overview` and
`changelog` would incorrectly be URL-encoded.
Linking to Google search results
This example pattern allows linking to Google searches.
{start_tabs}
- Pattern:
google:(?P<q>\w+)?
- URL template:
https://google.com/search{?q}
- Original text:
google:foo
orgoogle:
- Automatically links to:
https://google.com/search?q=foo
orhttps://google.com/search
{end_tabs}
!!! tip ""
This pattern uses the `{?var}` expression type. With the default expression
type (`{q}`), there would be no way to only include the `?` in the URL
if the optional `q` is present.